How To Create a High Availability Setup with Heartbeat and Floating IPs on Ubuntu 16.04

Introduction

Heartbeat is an open-source program that provides cluster infrastructure capabilities — cluster membership and messaging — to client servers. These capabilities are a critical component in a high availability (HA) server infrastructure. In this tutorial, we will demonstrate how to create a 2-node HA server setup by simply using Heartbeat and a DigitalOcean Floating IP.

Heartbeat is typically used in conjunction with a cluster resource manager (CRM), such as Pacemaker, to achieve a complete HA setup. If you are looking to create a more robust HA setup, look into using Corosync and Pacemaker or Keepalived.

Goal

When completed, the HA setup will consist of two Ubuntu 16.04 servers in an active/passive configuration. This will be accomplished by pointing a Floating IP, which is how your users will access your services or website, to point to the primary — or active — server unless a failure is detected. In the event that the Heartbeat service detects that the primary server is unavailable, the secondary server will automatically run a script to reassign the Floating IP to itself via the DigitalOcean API. Thus, subsequent network traffic to the Floating IP will be directed to your secondary server, which will act as the active server until the primary server becomes available again (at which point, the primary server will reassign the Floating IP to itself).

Note: This tutorial is intended for demonstration purposes and only covers some of the aspects of setting up a reliable HA solution.
The main takeaways of this document are the details on how to install active/passive nodes at the gateway level and to tie them up to a Floating IP.
To keep the tutorial simpler, instead of configuring reverse-proxy load balancers on each server, we will configure them to respond with their respective hostname and public IP address.

To achieve this goal, we will follow these steps:

Create 2 Droplets that will receive traffic

Create a Floating IP and assign it to one of the Droplets

Create a DNS A record that points to the Floating IP (optional)

Install Heartbeat on Droplets

Configure Heartbeat to run Floating IP reassignment service

Create Floating IP reassignment service

Test failover

With this goal in mind, we can begin working on setting up our HA setup.

Prerequisites

In order to automate the Floating IP reassignment, we must use the DigitalOcean API. This means that you need to generate a Personal Access Token (PAT), which is an API token that can be used to authenticate to your DigitalOcean account, with read and write access. You can achieve this by following the How To Generate a Personal Access Token section of the API tutorial. Your PAT will be used in a script that will be added to both servers in your cluster. It is important that you keep it somewhere safe for reference, as it allows full access to your DigitalOcean account.

In addition to the API, this tutorial utilizes the following DigitalOcean features:

Please read the linked tutorials if you want to learn more about them.

Create Droplets

The first step is to create two Ubuntu Droplets in the same datacenter, which will act as the primary and secondary servers described above. In our example setup, we will name them "primary" and "secondary" for easy reference. We will install Nginx on both Droplets and replace their index pages with information that uniquely identifies them. This will allow us a simple way to demonstrate that the HA setup is working. For a production setup, your servers should run the web server or load balancer of your choice.

Create two Ubuntu 16.04 Droplets, primary and secondary, with this bash script as the user data:

This will install Nginx and replace the contents of index.html with the Droplet's hostname and IP address (by referencing the Metadata service). Accessing either Droplet via its public IP address will show a basic webpage with the Droplet hostname and IP address, which will be useful for testing which Droplet the Floating IP is pointing to at any given moment.

Create a Floating IP

In the DigitalOcean Control Panel, click Networking, in the top menu, then Floating IPs in the sub menu.

After the Floating IP has been assigned, check that you can reach the Droplet that it was assigned to by visiting it in a web browser.

http://your_floating_ip

You should see the index page of your primary Droplet.

Configure DNS (Optional)

If you want to be able to access your HA setup via a domain name, go ahead and create an A record in your DNS that points your domain to your Floating IP address. If your domain is using DigitalOcean's nameservers, follow step three of the How To Set Up a Host Name with DigitalOcean tutorial. Once that propagates, you may access your active server via the domain name.

The example domain name we'll use is example.com. If you don't have a domain name right now, you should use the Floating IP address instead.

Install Heartbeat

The next step is to install Heartbeat on both servers. The simplest way to install Heartbeat is to use apt-get:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install heartbeat

Heartbeat is now installed but it needs to be configured before it will do anything.

Configure Heartbeat

In order to get our desired cluster up and running, we must create and set up these Heartbeat configuration files identically in both servers’ /etc/ha.d directories:

ha.cf — Global configuration of the Heartbeat cluster, including its member nodes

authkeys — Contains a security key that provides nodes a way to authenticate to the cluster

haresources — Specifies the services that are managed by the cluster and the node that is the preferred owner of the services. Note that this file is not used in a setup that uses a CRM like Pacemaker

We will also need to provide a script that will perform the Floating IP reassignment in the event that the primary Droplet's availability changes.

Gather Node Information

Before configuring ha.cf, we should look up the names of each node. Heartbeat requires that each node name matches their respective uname -n output.

On both servers, run this command to look up the appropriate node names:

uname -n

Note the output of the command. The example node names are "primary" and "secondary", which matches what we named the Droplets.

To determine which nodes are available, we will also need to look up the network interface and IP address that each node will use to communicate with the rest of the cluster. You may use any network interface, as long as each node can reach the other nodes in the cluster. We'll use the public interface of our Droplets, which happens to be eth0.

On both servers, use this command to look up the IP address of the eth0 interface (or look it up in the DigitalOcean Control Panel):

Note the IP address of the network interface (highlighted in the example). Be sure to get the IP addresses of both servers.

Create ha.cf File

On both servers, open /etc/ha.d/ha.cf in your favorite editor. We'll use nano:

sudo nano /etc/ha.d/ha.cf

The file should be new and empty. We need to add the network interfaces and names of each node in our cluster.

Copy and paste this configuration into the file, then replace the respective node names and IP addresses with the values that we looked up earlier. In this example, primary's IP address is 198.51.100.5 and secondary's IP address is 198.51.100.6:

It should look something like this (with a different authorization key):

/etc/ha.d/authkeys

auth1
1 sha1 d1e6557e2fcb30ff8d4d3ae65b50345fa46a2faa

Ensure that the file is only readable by the root user:

sudo chmod 600 /etc/ha.d/authkeys

Now copy the /etc/ha.d/authkeys file from your primary node to your secondary node. You can do this manually, or with scp.

On the secondary server, be sure to set the permissions of the authkeys file:

sudo chmod 600 /etc/ha.d/authkeys

At this point, both servers should have an identical /etc/ha.d/authkeys file.

Create haresources File

The haresources file specifies preferred hosts paired with services that the cluster manages. The preferred host is the node that should run the associated service(s) if the node is available. If the preferred host is not available, i.e. it is not reachable by the cluster, one of the other nodes will take over. In other words, the secondary server will take over if the primary server goes down.

On both servers, open the haresources file in your favorite editor. We'll use nano:

sudo nano /etc/ha.d/haresources

Now add this line to the file, substituting in your primary node's name if it is different:

/etc/ha.d/haresources

primary floatip

Save and exit the file. This configures the primary server as the preferred host for the floatip service, which is currently undefined. Let's set up the floatip service next.

Create Floating IP Reassignment Service

Our Heartbeat cluster is configured to maintain the floatip service, which a node can use to assign the Floating IP to itself, but we still need to create the service. Before we set up the service itself, however, let's create a script that will assign the Floating IP, via the DigitalOcean API, to the node that runs it. Then we will create the floatip service which will run the Floating IP reassignment script.

Create assign-ip Script

For our example, we'll download a basic Python script that assigns a Floating IP to a given Droplet ID, using the DigitalOcean API.

On both servers, download the assign-ip Python script:

sudo curl -L -o /usr/local/bin/assign-ip http://do.co/assign-ip

On both servers, make it executable:

sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/assign-ip

Since our script is making a request to an API, we’ll need the Python Requests library installed:

sudo apt-get install python-requests

Use of the assign-ip script requires the following details:

Floating IP: The first argument to the script, the Floating IP that is being assigned

Droplet ID: The second argument to the script, the Droplet ID that the Floating IP should be assigned to

Create floatip Service

To create the floatip service, all we need to do is create an init script that invokes the assign-ip script that we created earlier, and responds to start and stop subcommands. This init script will be responsible for looking up the Droplet ID of the server, via the Droplet Metadata service. Also, it will require the Floating IP that will be reassigned, and the DigitalOcean API token (the Personal Access Token mentioned in the prerequisites section).

On both servers, add open /etc/init.d/floatip in an editor:

sudo nano /etc/init.d/floatip

Then copy and paste in this init script, replacing the highlighted parts with your DigitalOcean API key and the Floating IP that should be reassigned:

/etc/init.d/floatip

#!/bin/bash

param=$1

export DO_TOKEN='your_DO_API_token'

IP='your_floating_IP_address'

ID=$(curl -s http://169.254.169.254/metadata/v1/id)

if [ "start" == "$param" ] ; then

python /usr/local/bin/assign-ip $IP $ID

exit 0

elif [ "stop" == "$param" ] ; then

exit 0;

elif [ "status" == "$param" ] ; then

exit 0;

else

echo "no such command $param"

exit 1;

fi

Save and exit the file.

Make the script executable:

sudo chmod u+x /etc/init.d/floatip

When this floatip service is started, it will simply call the assign-ip Python script and assign the specified Floating IP to the Droplet that executed the script. This is the script that will be called by the secondary server, if the primary server fails, to reassign the Floating IP to itself, . Likewise, the same script will be used by the primary server, to reclaim the Floating IP, once it rejoins the cluster.

Start Heartbeat

Now that Heartbeat is configured and all the scripts it relies on are set up, we're ready to start the Heartbeat cluster!

On both servers, run this command to start Heartbeat:

sudo systemctl start heartbeat

Our HA setup is now complete! Before moving on, let's test that it works as intended.

Test High Availability

It's important to test that a high availability setup works, so let's do that now.

Currently, the Floating IP is assigned to the primary node. Accessing the Floating IP now, via the IP address or by the domain name that is pointing to it, will simply show the index page of the primary server. If you used the example user data script, it will look something like this:

Floating IP is pointing to primary server

Droplet: primary, IP Address: 198.51.100.5

This indicates that the Floating IP is, in fact, assigned to the primary Droplet.

Now, let's open a local terminal and use curl to access the Floating IP on a 1-second loop. Use this command to do so, but be sure to replace the URL with your domain or Floating IP address:

while true; do curl http://example.com; sleep 1; done

Currently, this will output the same Droplet name and IP address of the primary server. If we cause the primary server to fail, by powering it off or stopping the Heartbeat service, we will see if the Floating IP gets reassigned to the secondary server.

Let's reboot the primary server now. Do so via the DigitalOcean Control Panel or by running this command on the primary server:

sudo reboot

After a few moments, the primary server should become unavailable. Pay attention to the output of the curl loop that is running in the terminal. You should notice output that looks like this:

That is, the Floating IP address should be reassigned to point to the IP address of the secondary server. That means that your HA setup is working, as a successful automatic failover has occurred.

You may or may not see the Connection refused error, which can occur if you try and access the Floating IP between the primary server failure and the Floating IP reassignment completion.

Now, you may power on your primary Droplet, via the DigitalOcean Control Panel. Because Heartbeat is configured with the primary Droplet as the preferred host to run the Floating IP reassignment script, the Floating IP will automatically point back to the primary server as soon as it becomes available again.

Conclusion

Congratulations! You now have a basic HA server setup using Heartbeat and a DigitalOcean Floating IP.

In this example, we’ve installed Nginx as a basic load balancer but if you wanted to improve your Heartbeat setup utilizing a reverse-proxy load balancer, you could do so by either configuring Nginx as one, or using HAProxy.

Please keep in mind that with either alternative you choose to use, you will want to bind your load balancer/reverse-proxy to the anchor IP address so that your users can only access your servers via the Floating IP address (and not via the public IP address of each server).